Quick Orientation
The French Quarter (Vieux Carré) is a rectangle 13 blocks long and 6 blocks wide, bounded by the Mississippi River (south), Canal Street (west), Rampart Street (north) and Esplanade Avenue (east). Founded 1718 — the oldest neighborhood in New Orleans.
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Planning your New Orleans trip? Get a personalised budget with our calculator — hotels in the Quarter run $200-450/night.
Calculate now →The Quarter walks end-to-end in 25 minutes. Most key sights cluster around Jackson Square. Bourbon Street runs parallel to Royal and Chartres — learning those three street names is 80% of the navigation.
Bourbon Street vs Royal Street
| Bourbon | Royal |
|---|
| Vibe | Loud, drunk, neon | Genteel, art, jazz |
| Best time | 9pm-3am | 10am-6pm |
| Price level | Cheap drinks, markup food | Expensive everything |
| Music | Cover bands, DJs | Solo musicians, jazz duos |
| Photo score | Colorful chaos | Classic shuttered balconies |
| Crowd age | 21-35 | All ages, well-dressed |
| Signature drink | Hand Grenade, Hurricane | Sazerac at Roosevelt |
The city's unofficial advice: do Bourbon for one night then retreat to Royal and Frenchmen for the rest of your trip. Bourbon is an experience; Royal is a neighborhood.
Jackson Square
The heart of the Quarter. A fenced plaza fronting the Mississippi, with St Louis Cathedral on the north side and a statue of Andrew Jackson in the middle.
- Tarot card readers and palmists — $10-20 per reading, along the fence, most after 10am
- Street artists — paintings from $20, caricatures $20-40
- Live musicians — brass bands, solo saxophones, tip $5-10
- Washington Artillery Park — raised viewing platform across Decatur, best photo of the cathedral
- Presbytère and Cabildo museums — flanking the cathedral, $10, great local history (Louisiana State Museum)
- 1850 House — preserved Pontalba apartment, $6, small but fascinating
Café du Monde & Beignets
Open 24 hours (except December 25) since 1862. Three items on the menu: beignets, coffee, chocolate milk. That is it.
- Beignets: $4.50 for an order of 3, buried in powdered sugar
- Café au lait with chicory: $3.25
- Cash is no longer required — cards accepted since 2020s
- Main patio queue: 30-60 min peak
- Takeout window: 5-10 min queue, same beignets
- Alternative: Café du Monde French Market location (200m away) — less crowded
- Other beignets: Café Beignet (on Royal), Loretta's Authentic Pralines, Morning Call
Wear dark clothing and prepare for powdered sugar in a 1-meter radius. Do not exhale while biting. Seasoned locals eat beignets outside holding them over the plate.
St Louis Cathedral
The oldest continuously active cathedral in the United States (current structure dates to 1789, expanded 1850). The three spires are the classic Jackson Square backdrop.
- Free entry, active parish
- Open 8:30am-4pm most days
- Mass at noon daily, plus Saturday 4pm and Sunday 9:30am + 11am
- Dress code: no tank tops, no exposed midriffs, hats off
- Organ concerts free most Saturdays, donations welcomed
- The 1722 pirate Jean Lafitte was allegedly a donor (city legend, unconfirmed)
Ghost & Voodoo Tours
New Orleans leans hard into the supernatural. There are around 50 licensed tour operators. Quality varies wildly.
- French Quarter Phantoms — best-reviewed, $32, 2 hours
- Haunted History Tours — largest operator, $31, 2 hours
- Witches Brew Tours — smaller groups, $35, 2 hours
- Voodoo Walking Tour — history of Marie Laveau, $25-35
- Cemetery tours — St Louis No. 1 requires a licensed guide (city rule), $25-30
- Skip: unlicensed guides on Jackson Square with cash-only rates — often inexperienced
Best Balcony Bars
Watching Bourbon Street from above is the right move — same atmosphere, twice the comfort.
- Pat O'Brien's — birthplace of the Hurricane, dueling pianos, huge courtyard
- Royal House Oyster Bar — small balcony over Royal, good oysters
- The Pelican Club — refined, on Exchange Alley, not cheap
- Hotel Monteleone's Carousel Bar — literally rotates, classic cocktails $16-20
- Bourbon Vieux — massive balcony, $10 entry on weekends, worth it for the view
- Napoleon House — 1797 building, classical music, Pimm's Cup is the order
Hidden Courtyards
Behind most French Quarter facades are secret private courtyards. A few are open to the public.
- Court of Two Sisters — jazz brunch in a massive courtyard, $42
- Brennan's — pink building on Royal, legendary courtyard bar, order Bananas Foster (invented here)
- Pat O'Brien's courtyard — flaming fountain centerpiece, free to sit with drinks
- Lafitte's Blacksmith Shop courtyard — 1772 building, reportedly the oldest continuously operating bar in the US
- Hotel Monteleone lobby — gorgeous, grand, free to wander
- Beauregard-Keyes House courtyard — $10 entry, quiet, never crowded
Safety
- Stick to well-lit, busy streets after 10pm
- Avoid crossing Rampart Street alone at night — Treme is friendly but less touristed
- Use licensed taxis or rideshare, not unofficial "pedicabs" quoting cash rates
- Drink-spiking happens — do not accept drinks from strangers, watch your glass
- ATMs inside bars often charge $6-10 — use a bank ATM on Canal Street
- Pickpockets work Bourbon Street crowds — front pockets, zipped bag
- Hurricanes (the storm kind): June-November, the city has plans, hotels brief you
"Sir, I bet you $20 I can tell you where you got your shoes" — classic street hustle. Answer: "On my feet, on Bourbon Street." Do not engage or tip.
Quick Orientation
The French Quarter (Vieux Carré) is a rectangle 13 blocks long and 6 blocks wide, bounded by the Mississippi River (south), Canal Street (west), Rampart Street (north) and Esplanade Avenue (east). Founded 1718 — the oldest neighborhood in New Orleans.
🧮
USA Trip Cost Calculator
Planning your New Orleans trip? Get a personalised budget with our calculator — hotels in the Quarter run $200-450/night.
Calculate now →The Quarter walks end-to-end in 25 minutes. Most key sights cluster around Jackson Square. Bourbon Street runs parallel to Royal and Chartres — learning those three street names is 80% of the navigation.
Bourbon Street vs Royal Street
| Bourbon | Royal |
|---|
| Vibe | Loud, drunk, neon | Genteel, art, jazz |
| Best time | 9pm-3am | 10am-6pm |
| Price level | Cheap drinks, markup food | Expensive everything |
| Music | Cover bands, DJs | Solo musicians, jazz duos |
| Photo score | Colorful chaos | Classic shuttered balconies |
| Crowd age | 21-35 | All ages, well-dressed |
| Signature drink | Hand Grenade, Hurricane | Sazerac at Roosevelt |
The city's unofficial advice: do Bourbon for one night then retreat to Royal and Frenchmen for the rest of your trip. Bourbon is an experience; Royal is a neighborhood.
Jackson Square
The heart of the Quarter. A fenced plaza fronting the Mississippi, with St Louis Cathedral on the north side and a statue of Andrew Jackson in the middle.
- Tarot card readers and palmists — $10-20 per reading, along the fence, most after 10am
- Street artists — paintings from $20, caricatures $20-40
- Live musicians — brass bands, solo saxophones, tip $5-10
- Washington Artillery Park — raised viewing platform across Decatur, best photo of the cathedral
- Presbytère and Cabildo museums — flanking the cathedral, $10, great local history (Louisiana State Museum)
- 1850 House — preserved Pontalba apartment, $6, small but fascinating
Café du Monde & Beignets
Open 24 hours (except December 25) since 1862. Three items on the menu: beignets, coffee, chocolate milk. That is it.
- Beignets: $4.50 for an order of 3, buried in powdered sugar
- Café au lait with chicory: $3.25
- Cash is no longer required — cards accepted since 2020s
- Main patio queue: 30-60 min peak
- Takeout window: 5-10 min queue, same beignets
- Alternative: Café du Monde French Market location (200m away) — less crowded
- Other beignets: Café Beignet (on Royal), Loretta's Authentic Pralines, Morning Call
Wear dark clothing and prepare for powdered sugar in a 1-meter radius. Do not exhale while biting. Seasoned locals eat beignets outside holding them over the plate.
St Louis Cathedral
The oldest continuously active cathedral in the United States (current structure dates to 1789, expanded 1850). The three spires are the classic Jackson Square backdrop.
- Free entry, active parish
- Open 8:30am-4pm most days
- Mass at noon daily, plus Saturday 4pm and Sunday 9:30am + 11am
- Dress code: no tank tops, no exposed midriffs, hats off
- Organ concerts free most Saturdays, donations welcomed
- The 1722 pirate Jean Lafitte was allegedly a donor (city legend, unconfirmed)
Ghost & Voodoo Tours
New Orleans leans hard into the supernatural. There are around 50 licensed tour operators. Quality varies wildly.
- French Quarter Phantoms — best-reviewed, $32, 2 hours
- Haunted History Tours — largest operator, $31, 2 hours
- Witches Brew Tours — smaller groups, $35, 2 hours
- Voodoo Walking Tour — history of Marie Laveau, $25-35
- Cemetery tours — St Louis No. 1 requires a licensed guide (city rule), $25-30
- Skip: unlicensed guides on Jackson Square with cash-only rates — often inexperienced
Best Balcony Bars
Watching Bourbon Street from above is the right move — same atmosphere, twice the comfort.
- Pat O'Brien's — birthplace of the Hurricane, dueling pianos, huge courtyard
- Royal House Oyster Bar — small balcony over Royal, good oysters
- The Pelican Club — refined, on Exchange Alley, not cheap
- Hotel Monteleone's Carousel Bar — literally rotates, classic cocktails $16-20
- Bourbon Vieux — massive balcony, $10 entry on weekends, worth it for the view
- Napoleon House — 1797 building, classical music, Pimm's Cup is the order
Hidden Courtyards
Behind most French Quarter facades are secret private courtyards. A few are open to the public.
- Court of Two Sisters — jazz brunch in a massive courtyard, $42
- Brennan's — pink building on Royal, legendary courtyard bar, order Bananas Foster (invented here)
- Pat O'Brien's courtyard — flaming fountain centerpiece, free to sit with drinks
- Lafitte's Blacksmith Shop courtyard — 1772 building, reportedly the oldest continuously operating bar in the US
- Hotel Monteleone lobby — gorgeous, grand, free to wander
- Beauregard-Keyes House courtyard — $10 entry, quiet, never crowded
Safety
- Stick to well-lit, busy streets after 10pm
- Avoid crossing Rampart Street alone at night — Treme is friendly but less touristed
- Use licensed taxis or rideshare, not unofficial "pedicabs" quoting cash rates
- Drink-spiking happens — do not accept drinks from strangers, watch your glass
- ATMs inside bars often charge $6-10 — use a bank ATM on Canal Street
- Pickpockets work Bourbon Street crowds — front pockets, zipped bag
- Hurricanes (the storm kind): June-November, the city has plans, hotels brief you
"Sir, I bet you $20 I can tell you where you got your shoes" — classic street hustle. Answer: "On my feet, on Bourbon Street." Do not engage or tip.